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LIVING WITH THE EARTH

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Title: LIVING WITH THE EARTH


1
LIVING WITH THE EARTH
  • CHAPTER 8
  • FOODBORNE ILLNESS

2
FOODBORNE ILLNESS
3
Objectives for this Chapter
  • A student reading this chapter will be able to
  • 1. Recognize, list, and explain the major reasons
    for food protection programs.
  • 2. List and describe the major categories and
    subcategories of agents causing foodborne
    illness.
  • 3. Describe the major foodborne pathogens
    including parasitic,viral, and bacterial diseases.

4
Objectives for this Chapter
  • A student reading this chapter will be able to
  • 4. Explain the mechanisms by which these
    pathogens cause foodborne illness, and describe
    how the life cycles of these organisms are
    important in this transmission of disease.
  • 5. List and describe the major disease symptoms
    in humans for these foodborne pathogens.

5
Objectives for this Chapter
  • A student reading this chapter will be able to
  • 6. Describe and explain the HACCP system in
    protecting against foodborne disease.
  • 7. Discuss recent regulatory efforts in the area
    of food potection.

6
FOODBORNE ILLNESS
  • Worldwide Distribution of Foodborne Pathogens
  • 1.5 billion children under the age of five suffer
    from diarrhea, and tragically, over 3 million die
    as a consequence.

7
FOODBORNE ILLNESS
  • Reasons for varying prevalence among geographic
    regions
  • Climate
  • Population demographics
  • Nutritional status
  • Cultural aspects

8
Reason for Food Protection Programs
  • The implementation of programs to minimize
    foodborne diseases is important because of the
    problems associated with morbidity, mortality,
    and economic loss.

9
Morbidity and Mortality Due to Foodborne Disease
  • In the United States there are as many as 33
    million cases of foodborne illness which are
    responsible for an estimated 9 thousand deaths
    annually.

10
Morbidity and Mortality Due to Foodborne Disease
  • The causative agents and modes of transmission
    (means through which an causative agent is
    spread) are known in less than 1 of the severe
    gastroenteritis cases.

11
Economic Consequences of Foodborne Illness
  • Medical Costs
  • Loss of Wages
  • Recall
  • Investigation
  • Litigation (Fig. 8-1)

12
Fig. 8-1
13
CAUSATIVE AGENTS OF FOODBORNE DISEASE
  • Foodborne illness is defined as any illness
    incurred from the consumption of contaminated
    food.

14
CAUSATIVE AGENTS OF FOODBORNE DISEASE
  • Radionuclides
  • Chemicals
  • Food Additives
  • Poisonous Plants and Animals
  • Pathogens (Table 8-1)

15
Table 1a
16
Table 1b
17
Radionuclides
  • Radiation is introduced into the food chain
    naturally from mineral deposits beneath the
    earths surface or from the atmosphere in the
    form of ultraviolet and cosmic rays.

18
Radionuclides
  • Radionuclides, which are deposited in the
    environment accidentally, or intentionally, as a
    direct result of human activity are of much
    greater concern.
  • Chernobyl
  • India vs. Pakistan

19
Chemicals
  • Ironically, man is responsible for many chemical
    contaminants presently found in food.
  • Between 80-90 of our exposure to potentially
    harmful chemicals is from food consumption.

20
Chemicals
  • Chemicals enter the food from packaging
    materials, agricultural applications of
    pesticides and fertilizers, by adding
    preservatives or colorings to foods, or by the
    release of industrial chemicals into the
    environment (Table 8-2).

21
Table 8-2
22
Packaging Materials
  • Acidic conditions will leach these chemicals from
    damaged packaging containers
  • Antimony
  • Cadmium
  • Lead

23
Symptoms
  • Antimony
  • Complications of the gastrointestinal,
    cardiovascular, and hepatic systems
  • Cadmium
  • Kidney damage
  • Lead
  • Neurological, kidney failure, bone integrity

24
Industrial Processes
  • Mercury
  • Methyl mercury is an acute toxin which causes
    tremors, neurological complications, kidney
    failure, and birth defects.
  • Fungicides and animal feed
  • Minamata Bay, Japan

25
Industrial Processes
  • Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs)
  • Widely used in industry, they are extremely
    stable compounds that do not degrade easily, they
    are resistant to heat, and they are also highly
    toxic.

26
Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs)
  • Rice oil-Japan, 1968
  • 1000 with Symptoms
  • Swelling of the eyes, rash, and gastrointestinal
    illness, five deaths.

27
Pesticides
  • Organochlorine compounds such as DDT and
    chlordane, organophosphates such as parathion and
    malathion, and inorganic compounds such as
    arsenics, have been have all been applied to food
    in the form of a pesticide.

28
Pesticides
  • Many of the chemicals banned from use in the
    United States are sold to developing nations who
    use them extensively in producing crops for
    export to the American market.

29
Pesticides
  • The EPA has banned DDT, aldrin, dieldrin,
    hepaclor, and kepone, yet traces of these
    compounds and their metabolites continue to be
    found in our food.
  • DDT and other chemicals of its class accumulate
    in the environment.

30
Food Additives
  • Food additives are intentionally added to food to
    alter taste, color, texture, nutritive value,
    appearance, and resistance to deterioration.

31
Food Additives
  • Food additives are considered to be the least
    hazardous source of foodborne illness, ranking
    behind pesticides, environmental contaminants,
    natural toxins, and microbial toxins.

32
Food Additives
  • Food and Drug Act of 1906
  • In 1958, the Food Additive Amendment to the Food
    Drug and Cosmetic Act required FDA approval
    before use.
  • Color Additive Amendment of 1950

33
Food Additives
  • Saccharin
  • Causes bladder cancer in lab animals
  • Not covered under the Delaney clause

34
Food Additives
  • Monosodium Glutamate
  • Chinese Restaurant Syndrome (headaches and
    possible nausea), and lesions of the retina.
  • An allowable daily intake (ADI) of 120mg/kg has
    been established for individuals over one year of
    age.

35
Food Additives
  • Nitrates and Nitrites
  • Prevent the growth of Clostridium spores.
  • In the body, nitrates can be reduced to nitrites
    which in turn oxidize hemoglobin and cause
    anoxia.
  • In food, nitrites react with amines, to form
    nitrosamines.
  • Have caused cancer of the liver, kidney, bladder,
    stomach, and pancreas of laboratory animals.

36
Food Additives
  • GRAS (Generally Recognized as Safe)
  • GRAS substances are chemicals that had a history
    of safe use before the 1958 Food Additive
    Amendment passed.
  • There are approximately 700 GRAS substances.
  • Currently, the FDA is reviewing their safety and
    reclassifying if necessary.

37
Poisonous Plants and Animals
  • By the process of trial and error, humans have
    identified plants that were either harmful to
    man, or possessed little nutritional value, and
    excluded them from our diet.
  • Some plants and animals known to be harmful to
    man have a significant nutritional value and are
    still part of our diet.

38
Poisonous Plants and Animals
  • Plant Sources
  • Alkaloids
  • Herbs -the pyrrolizidine group
  • Potatoes- Solanum alkaloids
  • Caffeine, teas- Xanthine alkaloids

39
Plant Sources
  • Lectins
  • Lectins are plant proteins(the Leguminosae
    family) that agglutinate red blood cells.
  • Saponins
  • Saponins are glycosides that hemolyze red blood
    cells.
  • As we are experiencing dietary shift to healthier
    foods such as alfalfa and soy based products, we
    can also expect an increase of saponin
    intoxications.

40
Animal Sources
  • Paralytic Shellfish Poisoning
  • Shellfish become toxic to humans when they feed
    on dinoflagellates such as Gonyaulax catenella in
    numbers greater than 200/ml of water.
  • Symptoms include a tingling or burning sensation
    of the lips and gums, ataxia, and paralysis of
    the diaphragm.

41
FOODBORNE PATHOGENS
  • More than 40 potential foodborne pathogens have
    been listed by CAST (Table 8-3).

42
Table 8-3
43
FOODBORNE PATHOGENS
  • Listed below are reasons for the surfacing of new
    and old pathogens.
  • Decrease in lactic acid bacteria
  • Contaminated water applied to food
  • Abuse of Antibiotics
  • Dietary shift
  • Longer shelf-life, ready-to-eat

44
FOODBORNE PATHOGENS
  • Parasitic Infections
  • The Nematodes
  • Trichinella spiralis (Fig. 8-2)
  • Taenia solium (Fig. 8-3)
  • Taenia saginata (Fig. 8-4)

45
Fig. 8-2Trichinosis life cycle
46
Fig. 8-3a
Taenia solium life cycle
47
Fig. 8-3b
Taenia solium life cycle
48
Fig. 8-4a
Taenia saginata life cycle
49
Fig. 8-4b
Taenia saginata life cycle
50
The Protozoans
  • Entamoeba histolytica (Fig. 8-5a-b)
  • Affects about 10 of the worlds population.
  • Outbreaks occur where sanitation is poor, risky
    sexual habits are practiced, and in institutional
    facilities.
  • Symptoms Range from mild diarrhea to amoebic
    dysentery.

51
Fig. 8-5a
Entamoeba histolytica life cycle
52
Fig. 8-5b
Entamoeba histolytica life cycle
53
The Protozoans
  • Giardia lamblia
  • Giardia lamblia is a protozoan flagellate found
    in areas with poor sanitation, and in unfiltered
    surface water supplies (Fig. 8-6).
  • Giardiasis is most common among those who travel
    to endemic areas, in homosexuals, and in child
    day care settings.

54
Fig. 8-6
55
Giardia lamblia
  • Cysts reach the surface water supplies through
    the fecal deposits of beaver and muskrats
  • Symptoms consist of nausea, explosive diarrhea
    (up to ten movements per day), and fatigue.

56
The Protozoans
  • Cryptosporidium
  • Primarily a waterborne pathogen, Cryptosporidium
    is transmitted via water contaminated with feces
    from human and agricultural origins.
  • Milwaukee, 1993

57
Cryptosporidium
  • Foodborne transmission of Cryptosporidium occurs
    via the fecal-oral route, usually from careless
    food handlers shedding the hardy oocysts (see
    life cycle, Fig. 8-7) of the organism.

58
Fig. 8-7
Cryptosporidium life cycle
59
Cryptosporidium
  • In healthy individuals, symptoms present as mild
    diarrhea, nausea, cramps, and a low grade fever.
  • Immunocompromised patients such as those with
    AIDS, experience high volume diarrhea, weight
    loss, and severe abdominal cramps.

60
FOODBORNE PATHOGENS
  • Viruses
  • microscopic particles that usually contain a
    single strand of RNA
  • Require a host cell for replication to occur.
  • The two most prominent foodborne viruses of
    present day are Hepatitis A and Norwalk-like
    virus.

61
Viruses
  • Hepatitis A
  • Transmitted via the fecal-oral route, and causes
    liver infection occasionally accompanied by
    jaundice.
  • Contamination occur by infected food workers
    handling foodstuffs, or from food products that
    have come in contact with water polluted with
    fecal matter.

62
Viruses
  • Norwalk-like Virus
  • In 1982, Norwalk-like viruses were the leading
    cause of reported foodborne illness in the United
    States, responsible for 5000 cases from two
    different outbreaks.

63
Viruses
  • Norwalk-like Virus
  • Food products such as creams, cream fillings, and
    salads, are efficient vehicles for viruses
    because they do not undergo any extensive heating
    before being served.
  • Symptoms include diarrhea and nausea

64
FOODBORNE PATHOGENS
  • Fungi
  • Fungi, such as molds and yeasts are single and
    multi-celled plant-like organisms that grow on
    cereals, breads, fruits, vegetables, and cheeses
    (Fig. 8-8).

65
Fig. 8-8
66
FOODBORNE PATHOGENS
  • Fungi
  • The majority of molds are aerobes.
  • Yeasts are facultative anaerobes.
  • Mycotoxins are mold metabolites produced on food,
    which cause illness or death when ingested by man
    or animals.

67
Fungi
  • Aspergillus flavus (Fig. 8-9)
  • Turkey X Disease
  • Four primary aflatoxins, B1, B2, G1, and G2,
    which are found in peanuts, corn, and cotton
    seed.
  • Causes hemorrhaging, anemia, ataxia, hematosis,
    cirrhosis of the liver, and is a very potent
    carcinogen.

68
Penicillium spp. (Fig. 8-9)
  • Rubratoxin, patulin, and yellow rice toxins are
    produced by members of the genus Penicillium.
  • Symptoms include vomiting, difficulty breathing,
    low blood pressure and respiratory arrest.

69
Mucor and Rhizopus spp. (Fig. 8-9)
  • Mucormycosis is the disease caused by fungi in
    the order Mucorales.
  • common spoilage organisms of bread and fruit.
  • Symptoms include the invasion of blood vessels,
    causing embolisms and tissue necrosis.

70
Fig. 8-9
71
FOODBORNE PATHOGENS
  • Bacteria
  • Bacteria are the single-celled organisms which
    are responsible for more than 80 of foodborne
    illness.
  • Two broad groups of bacteria classification are
  • gram-positive
  • gram-negative.

72
FOODBORNE PATHOGENS
  • Bacteria
  • Bacteria exist in the form of coccus, rods,
    spirillium, spirochete, and appendaged (Fig.
    8-10).

73
Fig. 8-10
74
Bacteria
  • Another characteristic useful in identifying
    bacteria is the ability to grow in the presence
    or the absence of oxygen (Fig. 8-11).
  • Aerobic bacteria
  • Anaerobic
  • Facultative anaerobe
  • Microaerophilic

75
Fig. 8-11
76
Bacteria
  • If the anaerobe Clostridium botulinum is
    suspected, the investigator might search for
    endospores, which are structures produced during
    the life cycle of certain bacteria (Fig. 8-12).

77
Fig. 8-12
78
Bacteria
  • Salmonella spp.
  • Gram-negative, facultative anaerobes.
  • Estimated 2-4 million cases a year in the U.S.
  • Three syndromes are caused by Salmonella species,
    typhoid fever, enteric fever, and gastroenteritis.

79
Bacteria
  • Salmonella spp.
  • The disease is transmitted via food, water, and
    the fecal-oral route
  • These organisms colonize in the small intestine,
    causing intestinal inflammation, resulting in
    diarrhea, abdominal cramps, chills, fever, and
    vomiting, which last 1-4 days.

80
Bacteria
  • Staphylococcus spp
  • Staphylococcus food poisoning, caused by the
    gram-positive cocci, Staphylococcus aureus.
  • Sickness is due to the consumption of the heat
    stable enterotoxin, and includes nausea,
    vomiting, and diarrhea.

81
Staphylococcus aureus
  • Contamination occurs through the preparation of
    foods by infected food handlers. Foods such as
    creams, cream pies, potato salad, and ham have
    all been implicated in in outbreaks of
    Staphylococci food poisoning.

82
Bacteria
  • Clostridium spp.
  • Clostridium perfringens and Clostridium botulinum
    are sporeforming anaerobic bacteria found in
    soils throughout the world.

83
Clostridium botulinum
  • Botulism is the illness that results when C.
    botulinum spores germinate and produce a toxin in
    the food to be ingested.
  • By destroying the spores in foods before canning
    or storing products, risk of botulism can be
    eliminated.

84
Clostridium botulinum
  • There are seven types of C. botulinum, A-G, which
    are identified by the toxin they produce.
  • The A toxin is the most common in the United
    States, and has been isolated in fruits,
    vegetables, fish, condiments, beef, pork, and
    poultry.

85
Clostridium botulinum
  • Symptoms
  • At the onset, symptoms such as nausea, vomiting
    and diarrhea, are present, then as the condition
    develops, fatigue, blurred vision, difficulty
    speaking and swallowing are experienced.

86
Bacteria
  • Campylobacter
  • Campylobacter species are part of the normal
    flora of the gastrointestinal tract of warm
    blooded animals.
  • During food processing, the intestinal tract is
    lacerated, allowing feces to contaminate the food.

87
Campylobacter
  • Campylobacter can survive for weeks in
    refrigeration at 4?C
  • Symptoms are usually mild including nausea,
    vomiting, and bloody diarrhea, but in severe
    infections, Gullian Barre Syndrome develops,
    which causes neuromuscular paralysis.

88
Bacteria
  • Escherichia coli
  • Gram negative
  • E. coli organisms which are important to
    foodborne illness can be divided into four
    groups, enteroinvasive, enterotoxigenic,
    enteropathogenic, and enterohemorrhagic.

89
Escherichia coli
  • Enteroinvasive E. coli invade the epithelial
    cells of the intestine, resulting in fever,
    chills, and bloody diarrhea.
  • Enterotoxigenic E. coli are responsible for
    travelers diarrhea, produce a toxin, and exhibit
    cholera like symptoms.

90
Escherichia coli
  • Enteropathogenic E. coli are most commonly found
    among infant nurseries in developing countries.
  • Enterohemorrhagic E. coli, also known as E. coli
    O157H7 is the result of consuming improperly
    cooked ground beef, raw milk, or unpasteurized
    apple cider.

91
Escherichia coli
  • E. coli O157H7
  • Symptoms generally include, abdominal cramps,
    watery to bloody diarrhea, vomiting, and possibly
    a fever and
  • Hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS), which is the
    primary cause of renal failure in children.

92
Vibrio cholerae
  • Gram negative vibrio
  • Responsible for the disease cholera which is
    common among LDCs and international travelers.
  • In Peru, in 1991, an outbreak of cholera spread
    to 322,562 Peruvians.

93
Vibrio cholerae
  • Vibrio cholerae colonizes on the lining of the
    intestine and produces the toxin choleragen.
  • Symptoms present as abdominal pains, dehydration,
    and a characteristic diarrhea, which has been
    termed rice water stool.

94
Factors Frequently Cited in Foodborne Illness
  • 1. Improperly refrigerated food.
  • 2. Improperly heated or cooked food.
  • 3. Food handlers who practice poor
    hygiene.
  • 4. Lapse of a day or more between preparing
    and serving food.

95
Factors Frequently Cited in Foodborne Illness
  • 5. Introducing raw or contaminated materials
    to a food that will not undergo further
    cooking.
  • 6. Improper storage of foods at temperatures
    ideal for bacterial growth.

96
Factors Frequently Cited in Foodborne Illness
  • 7. Failure to properly heat previously cooked
    foods to temperatures that will kill bacteria.
  • 8. Cross contamination of ready to serve foods
    with raw foods, contaminated utensils or
    machinery, or through the mishandling of foods

97
Figure 8-13 illustrates some useful procedures
for reducing food contamination.
98
Fig. 8-13
99
Hazard Analysis Critical Control Points
  • In response to this present threat, the federal
    government has mandated the implementation of
    hazard analysis critical control points (HACCP)
    strategies in the seafood, poultry, and meat
    industries.

100
Hazard Analysis Critical Control Points
  • There are seven key principles to the HACCP
    system (Table 8-4).

101
Table 8-4
102
United States Regulatory Efforts with Regard to
Food Protection
  • On December 18, 1997, the FDA required that all
    seafood processors, domestic and those importing
    to the United States, carry out a hazard analysis
    of their products and processes.

103
United States Regulatory Efforts with Regard to
Food Protection
  • On January 27, 1997, the USDA required meat and
    poultry slaughterers and processing facilities
    have sanitation SOPs in place, and that they also
    conduct generic E. coli testing.

104
Surveillance efforts
  • The Foodborne Diseases Active Surveillance
    Network (FoodNet)
  • Since January 1, 1996, it has identified
    outbreaks of Campylobacter in California,
    Salmonella in Oregon, and two outbreaks of E.
    coli O157H7 in Connecticut.
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